A man pretending to be Johnny Depp was making the rounds at the opening of Art Miami.

The Depp doppelgänger had on a beige fedora with long, shaggy hair, tattoos, dark shades and layers of silver rings, bracelets and beads. “Johnny” even had a fan club of beautiful young women following him around asking for selfies, which he happily posed for.

Then the deceptive Depp got the gallerists all excited when he started looking at a million-dollar “Flowers” series by Andy Warhol and Adrien Brody’s “Rick James Fish.”

Meanwhile, the real Bernie Taupin, who won a Golden Globe for Best Original Song in “Brokeback Mountain,” was spotted talking about his art with patrons at his booth.

The phony “Depp” never denied he was Johnny, but the word eventually got ’round that he wasn’t the real “Pirates of the Caribbean” star.

In past years, Nick Korniloff’s Art Miami has been visited by Brody, Leo DiCaprio, Cindy Crawford and Tommy Hilfiger.

The show opened its doors Tuesday and insiders say that — if this is humanly possible — “within the first 10 seconds” it had made a sale “in excess of $1 million” with the sale of Josef Albers’ 1958 oil “Desert Dusk” at Archeus/Post-Modern’s booth. The painting has previously been shown at the San Francisco MoMA and most recently at the Belvedere Museum Vienna.

An expensive piece by David Hockney was also sold within the first hour.